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Query: UNIPROT:P04141 (
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
)
6,790
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dendritic cells (DCs) are the main antigen-presenting cells in the skin. We hypothesized that intradermal (i.d.) injection of
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(
GM-CSF
) would recruit DCs into melanoma skin metastases and enhance autologous melanoma antigen presentation to host T cells. Sixteen patients with cutaneous or subcutaneous melanoma metastases were treated with
GM-CSF
injected i.d. into a single dermal metastasis and into a normal skin site for 10 consecutive days at one of four dose levels (10, 20, 40, or 80 microg/injection). Pretreatment and post-treatment skin and tumor biopsies were stained for a panel of T-cell, B-cell, macrophage, and DC immunohistochemical markers. Positive cells were quantitated in a blinded fashion. There was a significant increase in the number of DCs (
HLA
-DR+, S100+, factor XIIIa+) and CD45R0+ T cells in the skin and in the tumors Injected with
GM-CSF
at all dose levels. Uninjected control tumors showed no increase in
HLA
-DR+ cells or T-cell infiltrate, but did show an Increase in S100+ and factor XIIIa+ cells, suggesting a non-DC population. ID
GM-CSF
administered in this manner recruited DCs into melanoma tumors and normal skin. Although no antitumor effects were seen, this represents a potential method of preparing skin sites for vaccine delivery.
...
PMID:Intradermal injection of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in patients with metastatic melanoma recruits dendritic cells. 1064 71
The susceptibility of monocyte-derived immature dendritic cells (DC) to infection by various strains of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) was analysed. Immature DC were generated by incubation of peripheral blood monocytes with interleukin-4 and
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
for 7 days and were characterized by a CD1a+/CD40+/CD80+/CD86+/
HLA
-DR+/CD14- phenotype. Viral antigen expression and production of infectious progeny virus were analysed in infected immature DC cultures. Immature DC were 80-90 % susceptible to HCMV strains that had been propagated in endothelial cell culture, whereas the infection rate was negligible with fibroblast-adapted HCMV strains. Immature DC infection resulted in expression of viral immediate early, early and late genes. Productive infection was proven by the detection of infectious virus in single-step growth curves and in infectious centre assays. It is concluded that HCMV might interfere with the host immune reaction by permissive, lytic infection of immature DC.
...
PMID:Monocyte-derived dendritic cells are permissive to the complete replicative cycle of human cytomegalovirus. 1064 37
Dendritic cells (DCs) loaded with tumor antigens have the potential to become a powerful tool for clinical cancer treatment. Recently, the authors showed that a tumor-specific immune response can be elicited in culture via stimulation with autologous renal tumor lysate (Tuly)-loaded DCs that were generated from cytokine-cultured adherent peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). Here, the authors show that immunomodulatory DCs can be generated directly from nonfractionated bulk PBMC cultures. Kinetic studies of DC differentiation and maturation in PBMC cultures were performed by monitoring the acquisition of DC-associated molecules using fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis to determine the percentage of positive immunostained cells and the mean relative linear fluorescence intensity (MRLFI). Compared with conventional adherent CD14+ cultures, which have mostly natural killer, T, and B cells removed before cytokine culture, bulk PBMC cultures exhibited an early loss of CD14+ cells (day 0 = 78.8%, day 2 = 29.6% versus day 0 = 74%, day 2 = 75%) with an increase in yield of mature DCs (DC19- CD83+) (day 5 = 17%, day 6 = 21%, day 7 = 22% versus day 5 = 11%, day 6 = 15%, day 7 = 23%). Although a comparable percentage of DCs expressing CD86+ (B7-2), CD40+, and
HLA
-DR+ were detected in both cultures, higher expression levels were detected in DCs derived from bulk culture (CD86 = MRLFI 3665.1 versus 2662.1 on day 6; CD40 = MRLFI 1786 versus 681.2 on day 6; HLA-DR = MRLFI 6018.2 versus 3444.9 on day 2). Cytokines involved in DC maturation were determined by polymerase chain reaction demonstrating interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-12, interferon-gamma,
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha mRNA expression by bulk culture cells during the entire 9-day culture period. This same cytokine mRNA profile was not found in the conventional adherent DC culture. Autologous renal Tuly (30 micrograms protein/10(7) PBMCs) enhanced human leukocyte antigen expression by DCs (class I = 7367.6 versus 4085.4 MRFLI; class II = 8277.2 versus 6175.7 MRFLI) and upregulated cytokine mRNAs levels. Concurrently, CD3+ CD56-, CD3+ CD25+, and CD3+ TCR+ cell populations increased and cytotoxicity against autologous renal cell carcinoma tumor target was induced. Specific cytotoxicity was augmented when cultures were boosted continuously with IL-2 (20 U/mL biological response modifier program) plus Tuly stimulation. These results suggest that nonadherent PBMCs may participate in enhancing DC maturation. Besides the simplicity of this culture technique, bulk DC cultures potentially may be used with the same efficiency as conventional purified DCs. Furthermore, bulk culture-derived DCs may be used directly in vivo as a tumor vaccine, or for further ex vivo expansion of co-cultured cytotoxic T cells to be used for adoptive immunotherapy.
...
PMID:Immunomodulatory dendritic cells generated from nonfractionated bulk peripheral blood mononuclear cell cultures induce growth of cytotoxic T cells against renal cell carcinoma. 1068 41
Immunization with tumor-specific-associated antigen--pulsed dendritic cells has proved to be efficacious in various animal models and is being evaluated for the treatment of cancer in humans. Use of dendritic cells pulsed with specific peptides or transfected with tumor-associated antigen genes has been a focused area of investigation for inducing potent tumor and viral immune responses. In this study, the authors demonstrate transgene expression, including the lacZ and MART-1 genes, in dendritic cells infected with adenoviral constructs. These transiently transduced dendritic cells, derived from melanoma patients' monocytes cultured with
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
and interleukin-4, express the transgene and can stimulate patients' CD8+ T cells to elicit an antitumor immune response comparable to dendritic cells loaded with a defined peptide. These cytotoxic T lymphocytes were able to recognize both known and unknown tumor-associated antigen epitopes and exhibited cytolytic activity against
HLA
-matched tumor cells expressing the antigen. The ability to induce tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes in vitro using gene-modified dendritic cells that transiently express tumor-associated antigens demonstrates the potential use of these antigen-presenting cells for developing in vivo cancer vaccines.
...
PMID:Dendritic cells loaded with MART-1 peptide or infected with adenoviral construct are functionally equivalent in the induction of tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses in patients with melanoma. 1068 50
This phase II study was performed to determine the induction of a specific T-cell response, the clinical response rate, and toxicity of vaccination with different HLA class I-binding peptide epitopes derived from the melanocyte differentiation antigen tyrosinase in patients with stage IV melanoma. The study population consisted of 16 patients with metastatic disease and two patients who were macroscopically free of disease at study entry after resection of recurrent skin lesions. Patients received intradermal injections of 200 microgram [corrected] peptide corresponding to their
HLA
type on day 3, and 75 or 150 microg
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
on days 1 to 4. Vaccinations were repeated at weeks 2, 4, 6, 10, and 14. Monitoring of peptide-specific T-cell frequencies in the peripheral blood was performed using an interferon gamma ELISPOT assay. Eleven of the 16 patients with metastatic disease went off the protocol within the first 10 weeks because of tumor progression. Of the five patients with metastatic disease who received all six vaccinations, one patient showed a mixed response with regression of some lung metastases; two patients with progressive disease before vaccination had stable disease for 6 and 18+ months; and two patients had progression of their disease. The two patients who had all their metastases resected before vaccination did not have relapses for 6 and 12+ months after vaccination. Induction of tyrosinase-reactive T cells was found in these two patients and in two others with metastatic disease, including the one who achieved a mixed response and one with stable disease. This study shows limited clinical and immunologic activity of
HLA
class 1-peptide vaccination in combination with
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
in stage IV melanoma patients.
...
PMID:Phase 2 trial of vaccination with tyrosinase peptides and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor in patients with metastatic melanoma. 1074 54
Dendritic cells (DCs) are professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs) that can be used for vaccination purposes, to induce a specific T-cell response in vivo against melanoma-associated antigens. We have shown that the sequential use of early-acting hematopoietic growth factors, stem cell factor, IL-3 and IL-6, followed by differentiation with IL-4 and
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
allows the in vitro generation of large numbers of immature DCs from CD34(+) peripheral blood progenitor cells. Maturation to interdigitating DCs could specifically be induced within 24 hr by addition of TNF-alpha. Here, we report on a phase I clinical vaccination trial in melanoma patients using peptide-pulsed DCs. Fourteen HLA-A1(+) or HLA-A2(+) patients received at least 4 i.v. infusions of 5 x 10(6) to 5 x 10(7) DCs pulsed with a pool of peptides including either MAGE-1, MAGE-3 (HLA-A1) or Melan-A, gp100, tyrosinase (HLA-A2), depending on the
HLA
haplotype. A total of 83 vaccinations were performed. Clinical side effects were mild and consisted of low-grade fever (WHO grade I-II). Clinical and immunological responses consisted of anti-tumor responses in 2 patients, increased melanoma peptide-specific delayed-type hypersensitivity reactions in 4 patients, significant expansion of Melan-A- and gp100-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes in the peripheral blood lymphocytes of 1 patient after vaccination and development of vitiligo in another HLA-A2(+) patient. Our data indicate that the vaccination of peptide-pulsed DCs is capable of inducing clinical and systemic tumor-specific immune responses without provoking major side effects.
...
PMID:Phase I study in melanoma patients of a vaccine with peptide-pulsed dendritic cells generated in vitro from CD34(+) hematopoietic progenitor cells. 1076 Aug 27
The therapeutic use of dendritic cells (DC) in antigen-specific anti-tumor vaccines, requires sufficient numbers of functional DC, the preparation of which should comply with the code of Good Manufacturing Practice. In addition, the expression of tumor specific antigen should be possible in these DC. As a preclinical step, the method reported here was developed in healthy volunteers. Monocytes (Mo) were isolated by leukapheresis from 12 donors, purified by elutriation and then cultured for 6 days in sealed bags in AIM-V serum free medium with
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(
GM-CSF
) and interleukin-13 (IL-13). Between 6x10(8) and 1x10(9) immature DC (iDC) could be differentiated from one leukapheresis. Cells displayed a characteristic iDC phenotype (CD1a(+), CD14(-), CD80(+), CD86(+),
HLA
DR(+), CD83(-)), and had potent allogeneic and antigen dependent autologous T cell-stimulatory capacity. Moreover, iDC could be further differentiated into mature DC by CD40 ligation as assessed by CD83 expression and the upregulation of HLA-DR and costimulatory molecules. After infection with a recombinant adenovirus encoding for beta-galactosidase (betaGal), 50% to 80% of iDC expressed betaGal without toxicity. Adenovirus infection increased the expression of both costimulatory molecules and CD83, and also increased allogeneic stimulatory capacity. Thus, the method developed here allows us to use large numbers of functional iDC as will be required for therapeutic uses in man. These DC can express a transgenic protein.
...
PMID:Adenoviral transduction of human 'clinical grade' immature dendritic cells enhances costimulatory molecule expression and T-cell stimulatory capacity. 1091 50
Dendritic cells (DCs) have been shown to enhance anti-tumor immune responses in several preclinical models. Furthermore, DC-like function can be elicited from peripheral blood monocytes cultured in vitro with interleukin-4 and
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
. For this reason, a phase 1 study was initiated at the Surgery Branch of the National Cancer Institute to test the toxicity and biological activity of the intravenous administration of peripheral blood monocyte-derived DCs. The DCs were generated by 5- to 7-day incubation in interleukin-4 (1,000 U/mL) and
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(1,000 U/mL) of peripheral blood monocytes obtained by leukapheresis. Before administration, the DCs were pulsed separately with the
HLA
-A*0201-associated melanoma epitopes MART-1(27-35) and gp-100-209-2M. The DCs were administered four times at 3-week intervals. A first cohort of patients (n = 3) was treated with 6 x 10(7) DCs and a second cohort (n = 5) with 2 x 10(8) DCs (in either case, one half of the DCs were pulsed with MART-1(27-35) and the other half was pulsed with gp-100-209-2M). In a final cohort under accrual (n = 2) 2 x 10(8) DCs were administered in combination with interleukin-2 (720,000 IU/kg every 8 hours). The recovery of DCs after in vitro culture ranged from 3% to 35% (mean, 15%) of the original peripheral blood monocytes. Administration of DCs caused no symptoms at any of the doses, and the concomitant administration of interleukin-2 did not cause toxicity other than that expected for interleukin-2 alone. Monitoring of patients' cytotoxic T lymphocyte reactivity before and after treatment revealed enhancement of cytotoxic T lymphocyte reactivity only in one of five patients tested. Of seven patients evaluated for response, one had a transient partial response with regression of pulmonary and cutaneous metastases. A relatively large number of DCs can be safely administered intravenously. The poor clinical outcome of this study perhaps could be explained by the type of protocol used for DC maturation, the route of administration, or both. For this reason, this clinical protocol was interrupted prematurely, whereas other strategies for DC preparation and route of administration are being investigated at the authors' institution.
...
PMID:Phase 1 study in patients with metastatic melanoma of immunization with dendritic cells presenting epitopes derived from the melanoma-associated antigens MART-1 and gp100. 1091 59
HLA
-DM has been known to be largely absent from the cell surface of antigen-presenting cells, accumulating instead in the intracellular compartment. In this study, we demonstrated that a population of
HLA
-DM-positive (
HLA
-DM+) dendritic cells (DCs) can be identified in an in vitro culture of CD34+ bone marrow haematopoietic stem cells. CD34+ bone marrow cells of healthy donors were used to generate DCs with the recombinant human cytokines
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(
GM-CSF
), tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and stem cell factor (SCF), both with and without interleukin 4 (IL-4). Flow cytometric analysis demonstrated that
HLA
-DM+ cells comprised 2.5 +/- 0.9% and 1.8 +/- 0.4% of the CD34+ cell-derived progeny in the presence of
GM-CSF
, TNF-alpha and SCF after 7 d and 14 d of culture respectively. The number of
HLA
-DM molecules expressed per
HLA
-DM+ cell on d 7 was significantly higher than that on d 14 (1410 +/- 47 versus 370 +/- 25, P < 0.05). The addition of IL-4 to the cytokines from the commencement of culture increased the proportion of
HLA
-DM+ cells and increased the number of
HLA
-DM molecules per
HLA
-DM+ cell significantly (P < 0.05). Although most of the
HLA
-DM+ cells expressed CD1a, CD80 or CD86 antigen, only a small proportion of CD1a+, CD80+ or CD86+ cells expressed
HLA
-DM. About half the
HLA
-DM+ cells expressed CD83. The addition of IL-4 resulted in a decrease in the expression of CD83 on the
HLA
-DM+ cells on d 7. Microscopic evaluations of sorted
HLA
-DM+ cells revealed the characteristic morphological features of DCs. Primary mixed lymphocyte cultures demonstrated that the
HLA
-DM+ cells elicited a vigorous proliferation of allogeneic T cells. The level of antigen-specific T-cell activation induced by antigen-pulsed, chloroquine-treated
HLA
-DM+ cells was substantially higher than that induced by
HLA
-DM- cells (P < 0.05). These results show that
HLA
-DM can be used as a useful DC lineage-specific marker, as well as a tool for the characterization of DCs and human immunotherapy.
...
PMID:Surface expression of HLA-DM on dendritic cells derived from CD34-positive bone marrow haematopoietic stem cells. 1097 96
We have previously shown that thymic CD34+ cells have a very limited myeloid differentiation capacity and differentiate in vitro mostly into CD1a+-derived but not CD14+-derived dendritic cells (DC). Herein we characterized the human neonatal thymic DC extracted from the organ in relationship with the DC generated from CD34+ cells in situ. We show that in vivo thymic DC express E cadherin, CLA, CD4, CD38, CD40, CD44, and
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
-R (GM-CSF-R; CD116) but no CD1a. According to their morphology, functions, and surface staining they could be separated into two distinct subpopulations: mature
HLA
-DRhi, mostly interleukin-3-R (CD123)-negative cells, associated with thymocytes, some apoptotic, and expressed myeloid and activation markers but no lymphoid markers. In contrast, immature
HLA
-DR+ CD123hi CD36+ cells with monocytoid morphology lacked activation and myeloid antigens but expressed lymphoid antigens. The latter express pTalpha mRNA, which is also found in CD34+ thymocytes and in blood CD123hi DC further linking this subset to lymphoid DC. However, the DC generated from CD34+ thymic progenitors under standard conditions were pTalpha-negative. Thymic lymphoid DC showed similar phenotype and cytokine production profile as blood/tonsillar lymphoid DC but responded to GM-CSF, and at variance with them produced no or little type I interferon upon infection with viruses and did not induce a strict polarization of naive T cells into TH2 cells. Their function in the thymus remains therefore to be elucidated.
...
PMID:Identification of mature and immature human thymic dendritic cells that differentially express HLA-DR and interleukin-3 receptor in vivo. 1112 51
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